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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
business

Flurries,
High 33,
Low 17

Eagles
get the
win

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 23, Volume 71

Thursday, February 9, 2017 s 50¢

Free customer parking in downtown Pomeroy
Meters to be removed from town at a later date
By Michael Hart
Special to the Sentinel

Michael Hart photo

Parking meters like this one in downtown
Pomeroy will soon be a thing of the
past as council approved free parking,
effective immediately, for the downtown
area.

POMEROY — After Monday’s meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council, downtown
parking is completely and
totally free for all customers
and visitors to the area.
Members of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association presented results of a free-parking pilot program initiated
last year during Monday’s
meeting.
For several months, Pomeroy’s river walk parking lot

and Main Street have been
free parking zones in an effort
to improve foot trafﬁc and
visitor experience. When
implemented, the council
requested merchants provide
feedback on the measure after
the new year.
Speaking in the latter half
of the three-hour meeting,
Main Street shop owner
Paige Cleek told the council,
“We were given this time
frame to test it, and we
believe it has been successful.”
Stating all the merchants

in attendance had seen
improved business, Cleek
continued, “We have been
very vocal about how this
helps our business from the
beginning and we would
like to see all paid parking
removed.”
Susan Clark, who operates
a business on Court Street,
argued for removal of meters
and parking fees, pointing to
the stresses imposed on customers and visitors to town.
She described meters as an
outdated technology and general inconvenience.

“We are your face downtown, we are in this together.
Let’s bring Pomeroy out of 50
years ago and into this great
place that is happening now,”
she concluded.
In the past, a point raised
in favor of meters past has
been downtown congestion,
and a concern indeﬁnite free
parking could incentivize
non-shoppers to ﬁll spaces,
blocking consumer trafﬁc.
In a December meeting,
Councilperson Phil Ohlinger,
who supported removal,
pointed out turnover on back
streets could slow after halting parking costs.
See PARKING | 5

Sheriff ’s Office
launches tip line
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY —The Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce has launched a new tool in the effort to
ﬁght drug activity in the county.
The Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce has created a
tip line for reporting criminal drug activity.
A statement on the ofﬁce’s Facebook page from
Sheriff Keith Wood states in part, “The information comes directly to me and will remain anonymous. The information you provide is crucial in
our efforts to initiate an investigation.”
Tips on criminal drug activity can be provided
at meigssheriff.org or by calling the tip line at
(740) 992-4682.

Pomeroy names
part-time village
administrator
By Michael Hart

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Blitz Build and Wall Build sponsors are pictured on the front porch of Meigs County’s first Habitat for Humanity house being built in
Middleport. The Blitz Build days were sponsored by Farmers Bank and Ohio Valley Bank, while the Wall Build was sponsored by Mark
Porter GM. Pictured from left are Paul Reed and Dru Reed of Farmers Bank, Mark Porter, Ohio Valley Bank representatives Jody Lavender
and Valorie Storms, and Samantha Waldron of Habitat for Humanity.

Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — Following a lengthy executive
session during the Feb. 6 meeting of Pomeroy Village Council, Mayor Brian Shank announced “we
have discussed it, and pending a vote, I am going
to appoint Joe Woodall to be a part time village
administrator.”
The following unanimous vote made Woodall
the head of Public Works and Operator of Record
for Pomeroy, a role he already holds full time for
the Village of Middleport.
Woodall, speaking in an interview with the Sentinel, said “It’s a lot of hours, deﬁnitely,” but that
he was willing to take on the added responsibilities because “My main concern is to provide safe
and pleasant drinking water for citizens of Pomeroy, and to ensure EPA compliance.”
The village administrator has a variety of
See POMEROY | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Hard hat tour held at Habitat house
Dedication set for March 13
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT —
Tuesday marked another
stop toward the completion of the ﬁrst Habitat
for Humanity house constructed in Meigs County
— the hard hat tour.
Samantha Waldron,
director of Community
Engagement for Habitat
for Humanity of Southeast Ohio, explained that
the hard hat tour is a way
to show the project spon-

sors and donors what
their donations are going
toward. For many, they
may have been at the
house for the Blitz Build
in November or the Wall
Build at Mark Porter GM
in late October, but they
may not have seen the
property since that time.
“It’s the wow factor,”
said Waldron of the
sponsors coming into
the house and seeing the
progress that had taken
place. “Without them it
is not possible,” said Wal-

dron of the sponsors.
In addition to the Blitz
Build sponsors Farmers
Bank and Ohio Valley
Bank, and Wall Build
sponsor Mark Porter
GM, many area churches
have been involved in
making the project a success.
Now, the cabinets are
installed, the appliances
are in and carpet was
being put down in the
bedrooms on Tuesday
while the tour was taking
place.
Habitat for Humanity
projects are about more
than just building a house

for a family, it is changing
the lives of those in that
family and possibly others in the community.
Site supervisor Bryan
Smith explained that
the homeowner and
her daughter have been
spending time at the
house doing work ranging from painting to
cleaning windows and
detail work. Smith has
also been working with
them to explain maintenance of the house and
how to do some tasks
at the residence moving
forward.
See HOUSE | 5

Bossard to host Tuskegee Airmen living history
Staff Report

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

GALLIPOLIS — The
Bossard Memorial
Library will be
hosting a living
history program
in celebration
of Black History Month titled
“Courage in the
Gibbs
Skies: The Story
of the Tuskegee
Airmen” Feb. 19 at 3
p.m. in its Riverside
Room.

The performance will
be led by living historian
Anthony Gibbs.
“In commemoration of African
American History
Month, Bossard
Library is pleased
to provide a living
history portrayal
of a Tuskegee Airman,” said Library
Director Debbie
Saunders. “Attendees
will learn about the

history and service of
these brave pilots. For
those who wish to read
more about the subject
of the Tuskegee Airmen,
Bossard Library offers a
wide variety of books on
this historic subject as
well.”
The Tuskegee Airmen were known for
their service as African
American military pilots,
both bomber and ﬁghter,
See AIRMEN | 5

ABOUT THE
AIRMEN

The Tuskegee Airmen
were known for their
service as African
American military
pilots, both bomber
and fighter, throughout
World War II. Pilots
were trained at Moton
Field, considered the
Tuskegee Army Air
Field, and educated at
Tuskegee University
near Tuskegee, Ala.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Thursday, February 9, 2017

DEATH NOTICES

Daily Sentinel

DENNEY

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

PROCTORVILLE — Beverly Denney, 75, of Proctorville, passed away Wednesday February 8, 2017 at
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Jason F. Sommer, 49, of Gal- home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
lipolis, Ohio, passed away on Wednesday, February 8,
in charge of arrangements which are incomplete.
2017 at his residence.
Services will be 2 p.m., Sunday, February 12, 2017
at the Willis Funeral Home with Chaplain Fred WilCHAPMAN
liams ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Gary Allen “Chappy”
home on Saturday, February 11, 2017 from 6 – 8 p.m. Chapman, 71, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Wednesday,
February 8, 2017, at the Emogene Dolin Hospice
DANIELS
House, in Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral Services will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday,
MILAN, Mo. — Richard Scott Daniels, 53, formerly
February 11, 2017, at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
of Gallia County, Ohio, passed away on Saturday
Home, with Pastors Carl F. “Boxer” Swisher and Bob
January 28, 2017 at Milan Health Care in Milan, MisPatterson ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Kirkland
souri.
Memorial Gardens, where full military graveside rites
Grave side service will be held Saturday, February
will be rendered by the W.V. Honor Guard and the
11 at 1 p.m. in Good Hope cemetery.
V.F.W. Stewart-Johnson Post #9926. Gary will also be
honored with a full ﬁreﬁghter’s funeral by members of
WILSON
the Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department, who
will also serve as pallbearers. Visitation will be held at
WILLOW WOOD — Elder Loren Wilson, 66, of
the funeral home on Friday evening, from 6 p.m. to 8
Willow Wood, died Feb. 7 at The Emogene Dolin
p.m.
Jones Hospice House of Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be held 11 a.m. Saturday, Febru- BING
ary 11, 2017 at Mt. Pleasant Freewill Baptist Church
off Greasy Ridge, Chesapeake. Burial will follow at
RACINE, Ohio — Ernest Clifford Bing, 71, of
Mt. Pleasant Cemetery. Visitation will be held 6 p.m. Racine, Ohio, passed away on February 3, 2017, at
to 8 p.m. Friday, February 10, 2017 at Hall Funeral
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Home and Crematory, Proctorville.
Arrangements are pending at Roush Funeral Home
in Ravenswood, W.Va.

SOMMER

SCARBERRY

THOMAS

PROCTORVILLE — Marshall Scarberry, 77, of
Proctorville, Ohio passed away on Monday, February
6, 2017 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington,
W.Va.
A graveside service will be held 11 a.m. Friday, February 10, 2017 at Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. There
will be no visitation.

MASON, W.Va. — Billy L. Thomas, 85, Mason,
W.Va., passed away on Feb. 8, 2017 at Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center.
At his request there will be no visitation. Services
and burial will be at the convenience of the family.
Deal Funeral Home is handling the arrangements.

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 63.80
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 22.77
Big Lots (NYSE) - 51.22
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 57.00
BorgWarner (NYSE) 40.46
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
- 15.50
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 64.73
Collins (NYSE) - 90.51
DuPont (NYSE) - 75.96
US Bank (NYSE) - 52.89
Gen Electric (NYSE) 29.43
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
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JP Morgan (NYSE) 85.96
Kroger (NYSE) - 32.84
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 58.66
Norfolk So (NYSE) 120.94
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 27.45
BBT (NYSE) - 45.79

BRAGG
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Diana Lewis Bragg,
74, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Tuesday, February 7,
2017, at Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be held at Trinity United
Methodist Church on Sunday, February 12, 2017, at
3 p.m., with visitation from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m., also
at the church. Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens. Crow-Hussell Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangements.

DAMERON
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Mary Sue Cole Dameron,
89, of Huntington, passed away Tuesday, February 7,
2017 at Wyngate Senior Living Community, Barboursville, W.Va.
Per her request, there will be no services.

PROCTORVILLE — Mary L. Plybon, 91, of Proctorville, Ohio passed away Tuesday, February 7, 2017
at Heartland of Riverview, South Point.
Funeral service 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 11 at Schneider-Hall Funeral Home, Chesapeake. Burial will follow
in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be
held 12 noon to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 11 at Schneider-Hall Funeral Home, Chesapeake.

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BURDETT

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St. Petersburg, Fla. — Margaret Thomas Burdett,
93, died February 3, 2017 under the care of Hospice
at Bon Secours Place in Saint Petersburg, Florida. A
private family service was held in Saint Petersburg.
Deal Funeral Home is assisting the family, locally.

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CONTACT US

Monday, Feb. 13
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township
Trustees will hold their regular business meeting
at the Bedford Town Hall at 7 p.m.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Republican
Executive Committee will have a meeting at 7:30
p.m. at the Republican Headquarters. Topic of
discussion will include the Lincoln Day Dinner
which is on March 23 at 6 p.m. at Meigs High
School. Names will also be taken for the summer
state highway jobs.

Peoples (NASDAQ) 31.55
Pepsico (NYSE) - 105.69
Premier (NASDAQ) 18.82
Rockwell (NYSE) - 148.63
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
- 11.20
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- 5.73
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 67.81
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 13.96
WesBanco (NYSE) 40.06
Worthington (NYSE) 47.91
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions
Feb. 8, 2017, provided by
Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero
in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Wednesday, Feb. 15
MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the
Natural Resources Assistance Council at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District, 1400 Pike Street, Marietta, at 10 a.m. The
purpose of the meeting is to review the Round
11 grant applications to determine eligibility for
funding of the Clean Ohio Conservation Fund
for District 18. Questions regarding this meeting should be directed to Michelle Hyer mhyer@
buckeyehills.org at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District or call (740) 3761025.
Saturday, Feb. 18
POMEROY — The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the DAR will host a representative of
the Division of Wildlife at their meeting at 1 p.m.
in the Pomeroy Library, downstairs conference
room. Members, guests and those interested in
the program or DAR are encouraged to attend.
Wednesday, Feb. 22
POMEROY — An American Red Cross Blood
Drive will be held from 1-6:30 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center. Call 1800-RED-CROSS
or visit redcrossblood.org to schedule an appointment.

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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9
7 PM

7:30

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Fortune
Entertainm- Access
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PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
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10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
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at 6 p.m.
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News 6:30
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(N)
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(N)
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Grey's Anatomy "None of
Your Business" (N)
Song of the Mountains
"Seldom Scene"

Chicago Med "Theseus'
Ship" (N)
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Ship" (N)
Scandal "Fates Worse Than
Death" (N)
Mercy Street "One Equal
Temper"

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Theory (N)
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MasterChef "Quest for the
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Pre-game
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Thursday, Feb. 9
POMEROY — The meeting of the Alpha Iota
Masters will be held at 11:30 a.m. at New Beginning United Methodist Church, Pomeroy. Hostesses are Linda Bates and Debbie Finlaw.

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

PLYBON

Card Shower
POMEROY — Evelyn Well will be celebrating
her 90th birthday of Feb. 14. Cards may be sent to
her at 44088 Cherry Ridge Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Tuesday, Feb. 14
CHESTER TWP. — The Chester Township
Trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of
Health will meet at at 5 p.m. in the conference
room of the Meigs County Health Department.

WALLACE
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Rondal Eugene Wallace, 85,
died Tuesday, February 7, 2017 at Kobacker House.
Friends may call at Jerry Spears Funeral Home,
2693 W. Broad St., Saturday, 5-7 p.m. where service
will be held at 7 p.m., Saturday. Additional calling
hours, Sunday, 1 - 2:30 p.m. at the Providence Missionary Baptist Church, 3677 Teens Run Rd., Crown
City, Ohio, 45623 where service will be held 2:30 p.m.
Sunday. Interment to follow at Providence Cemetery.

Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciates
your input to the community calendar. To make
sure items can receive proper attention, all information should be received by the newspaper at
least ﬁve business days prior to an event. All coming events print on a space-available basis and
in chronological order. Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

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�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 9, 2017 3

Stockmeister appointed as OSU trustee Anytime Shine to hold grand opening
Staff Report

“I feel privileged, humbled and thrilled.”

JACKSON — A Jackson man with a broad
range of business/profestelephone call from Gov.
sional experience, and
Kasich. “I was ﬁrst asked
record of entrepreneurial
more than three years ago
enterprise as well as civic if I would consider doing
leadership and service, has this. I was contacted again
been named to the board
last December and was
entrusted with leading
later interviewed by board
The Ohio State University members. It was quite a
(OSU).
process.”
Ohio Gov. John Kasich
In an ofﬁcial notiﬁcation
announced Friday, Feb. 3, to Stockmeister and other
the appointment of Alan
board members, Board
Stockmeister of
Chairman Alex
Jackson as a memShumate wrote:
ber of OSU Board
“We are very grateof Trustees for an
ful to the Governor
8-year term beginfor this appointning Feb. 3 and
ment, which comcontinuing until
plements the skills
May 13, 2025.
and experiences of
OSU is the larg- Stockmeister our existing memest university in
bers and brings an
Ohio and also one of
important geographic perthe largest in the nation
spective to our work.”
and the 20-member OSU
The mention of the
Board of Trustees is
“geographic” was likely a
responsible for oversight
reference to the fact that
of the university’s academ- the board has lacked repreic programs, budgets and
sentation from Southeastgeneral administration,
ern Ohio in the past.
and employment of faculty
“Honestly, I’m not sure
and staff. The full board
if there has been any other
has four regularly schedperson from Southeastuled meetings per year,
ern Ohio appointed to
but much of the main busi- the board,” Stockmeister
ness is carried out outside commented. “From that
of full board meetings by
perspective, I will be very
committees of the board
proud to serve and repmembers.
resent not only Ohio, but
The board includes such also Southeastern Ohio.”
luminaries and leaders as
Stockmeister is a lifeOSU and NBA basketball
long Jackson resident
star Clark Kellogg, promi- and the son of the late
nent Columbus area attor- Art (A.J.) and Bernadine
ney, community volunteer Bennett Stockmeister. He
and philanthropist Abigail graduated from Jackson
Wexner, J.M. Smucker
High School in 1970,
Co. Chairman Timothy
then enrolled at Michigan
Smucker, Anthem Blue
State University where he
Cross and Blue Shield
earned a Bachelor of SciPresident Erin Hoeﬂinger, ence degree. After graduand President and CEO of ating from college in 1974,
Battelle Memorial Instihe returned to Jackson
tute Jeffrey Wadsworth.
and became involved in
“I feel privileged,
the contracting companies
humbled and thrilled,”
and businesses started by
his parents.
Stockmeister said of his
Stockmeister is currentappointment, adding he
ly the chairman, and one
learned of it Friday in a

—Alan Stockmeister

of the majority owners,
of Dallas-based Elemetal,
a global precious metals
conglomerate; and also
the owner and president
of Foremost Management,
Inc., a Jackson-based construction management,
development, and property management ﬁrm. He
has worked to build various private business enterprises in Southeastern
Ohio and nationwide. His
family businesses range
from construction and
development to media and
manufacturing. His companies include Jackson
County Broadcasting, Inc.,
which is composed of The
Radio and The Telegram.
Stockmeister also has
dedicated his private time
serving his community on
various boards related to
banking, hospitals, foundations and economic development. He has served as
chairman of the Board of
Trustees both of the Holzer Consolidated Health
System and the Holzer
Medical Center-Jackson.
He has also served on the
Milton Banking Co. Board
and the University of Rio
Grande Board of Trustees.
Stockmeister is married and he and his wife,
Susan, have six children.
Son Aaron Stockmeister is employed by Fifth
Third Bank in Cincinnati.
Daughter Cora Stockmeister Willett and son,
Seth Stockmeister, are
both involved in the family businesses in Jackson.
Son Cameron Winchester
is employed as a graphic
designer in New York City,
while daughter Jobeth
Winchester and son Kip
Winchester are both students at The Ohio State
University.

Staff Report

“It’s a welcome surprise to unexpectedly
win something, especially millions of dollars.
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
—West Virginia Attorney
It’s crucial that consumers don’t let the
General Patrick Morrisey
excitement overshadow caution and smart
warns consumers to be cauthinking.”
tious when notiﬁed of win-

—Patrick Morrisey

scam circulating in West
Virginia. The scammers use
a familiar name to lull consumers into a false sense
of trust and unquestioned
acceptance.
Although Publishers
Clearing House does award
prizes, there are some
things to look for to verify
the legitimacy of any win.
Their sweepstakes are
free to enter and winners
never pay to receive their
prize. Consumers should
never agree to send cash,
wire money or provide
account numbers associated

2017 Faith &amp; Family
Faith and Family is a project designed to reach out to
people in need and at the same time reach out to the
community with a message of hope. We want to form
a stronger alliance with the church community and do
more meaningful job of helping local churches spread
their message to people who are looking for answers and
inspiration. We need your help to do this.
We will publish an inspirational full color magazine that we have entitled Faith and Family. This publication,
with your help, will list all our churches and carry a message of hope. As your local newspaper we want
to use our resources to help get your message to those in need. The magazine will carry profiles of local
churches and testimonials from local readers who have experienced a change in life as the result of their
faith and beliefs. These stories can be a powerful influence in raising the consonances of the reader looking
for answers and in need of a church to help heal. This publication will also increase the strength and unity
among the local church community.

Call y
rreepprre our loca
esseennta l
tattiivve
TTO
OD
DA
AYY!! e

Article submitted by The Telegram in
Jackson, Ohio.

AG warns consumers
of sweepstakes scam
ning a sweepstakes bearing
the name of a legitimate
company, such as those
perpetuated by impostors
falsely claiming to represent
Publishers Clearing House.
These scams often look
to steal money or personal
information.
“It’s a welcome surprise
to unexpectedly win something, especially millions
of dollars,” Morrisey said.
“It’s crucial that consumers
don’t let the excitement
overshadow caution and
smart thinking.”
The Attorney General’s
Consumer Protection Division routinely hears of this

Courtesy photo

This Saturday, Feb. 11, Anytime Shine Car Wash of Gallipolis, Ohio, pictured, will officially
celebrate with a grand opening event and ribbon cutting ceremony. The grand opening event is
scheduled for 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. There will be refreshments served, including Silver Bridge
Coffee, and 93.1 The Wolf will be in attendance to do a live remote. The first 20 patrons will receive
a free Anytime Shine t-shirt made by BCMR Publications and every 10th patron will receive a free
car wash. The ribbon cutting ceremony, hosted by the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, will
kick off the event at 2:30 p.m.

with a credit/debit card or
bank account in order to
claim a prize.
Publishers Clearing
House representatives also
will never call winners or
ask for personal information. They instead notify
winners in-person or via
certiﬁed mail.
Anyone with questions
or concerns should call the
Attorney General’s Ofﬁce
Consumer Protection Division at 800-368-8808 or
visit www.wvago.gov.
Submitted by the office of Attorney
General Patrick Morrisey.

Deadline: Feb. 10th, 2017 Publishes: Feb. 28th, 2017

Gallipolis
Pomeroy
Daily Tribune Daily Sentinel
740-446-2342

740-992-2155

www.mydailytribune.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

Point Pleasant
Register
304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

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�E ditorial
4 Thursday, February 9, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

California goes
Confederate
By Victor Davis Hanson

“California is
becoming a
Over sixty percent of reactionary two-tier
California voters went
state of masters and
for Hillary Clinton — a serfs whose culture
margin of more than 4
million votes over Don- is as peculiar and
out of step with
ald Trump.
Since Clinton’s
the rest of the
defeat, the state
country as was the
seems to have become
antebellum South’s.”

Contributing columnist

unhinged over Trump’s
unexpected election.
“Calexit” supporters
brag that they will have
enough signatures to
qualify for a ballot measure calling for California’s secession from the
United States.
Some California
ofﬁcials have talked of
the state not remitting
its legally obligated tax
dollars to the federal
government. They talk
of expanding its sanctuary cities into an entire
sanctuary state that
would nullify federal
immigration law.
Californians also now
talk about the value of
the old Confederate
idea of “states’ rights.”
They whine that their
state gives far too much
revenue to Washington
and gets too little back.
Residents boast
about how their cool
culture has little in
common with the rest
of the U.S. Some Californians claim the state
could easily go it alone,
divorced from the United States.
Sound a bit familiar?
In December 1860,
South Carolina seceded
from the Union in furor
over the election of
Abraham Lincoln.
Lincoln did not
receive 50 percent of
the popular vote. He
espoused values the
state insisted did not
reﬂect its own.
In eerie irony, liberal California is now
mirror-imaging the
arguments of reactionary South Carolina and
other Southern states
that vowed to go it
alone in 1860 and 1861.
Like California,
South Carolina insisted
it could nullify federal
laws within its state
borders.
Like California,
South Carolina promised to withhold federal
revenues.
Like California,
South Carolina and
other Confederate
states bragged that
their unique economies
did not need the Union.
They boasted that
“King Cotton” had
created the wealthiest class in the United
States. Silicon Valley
now often assumes
that Google, Facebook,
Apple and others are
near-trillion-dollar companies that are a world
unto their own.
Slavery and the
extravagant income
from cotton warped
the Southern economy
and culture. A wealthy
plantation elite, with
its millions of exploited
slaves, ensured that
there would be virtually
no middle, working or
small-business class.
Huge estates were
surrounded by the
impoverished shacks of
servants. Hardscrabble
farmers or small busi-

— Victor Davis Hanson

nessmen often ﬂed
westward to escape
the shackles of wealth
disparity.
The export-dependent Southern elite
demanded unfettered
free trade. It offered bitter resistance to Northern protectionism.
South Carolina elites
were opposed to federal
infrastructure projects
such as the building of
roads, canals, bridges
and reservoirs, and
other such unwelcome
“progress.”
Confederates boasted
that their antebellum culture was more
romantic, natural, pristine, healthy and moral
than was the bustle,
grime and hypercapitalism of Northern
industrialism.
Southern aristocrats
believed that they were
culturally superior —
in terms of music, art
and literature — to
other Americans.
Of course, this is
2017, not 1860, and
California is super-liberal, not an antebellum
slave-owning society.
Nonetheless, what
is driving California’s
current efforts to nullify federal law and the
state’s vows to secede
from the U.S. are some
deeper — and creepy
— similarities to the
arrogant and blinkered
Old South.
California is likewise
becoming a winnertake-all society. It hosts
the largest numbers
of impoverished and
the greatest number
of rich people of any
state in the country.
Eager for cheap service
labor, California has
welcomed in nearly a
quarter of the nation’s
undocumented immigrants. California has
more residents living in
poverty than any other
state. It is home to one
third of all the nation’s
welfare recipients.
The income of California’s wealthy seems
to make them immune
from the effects of the
highest basket of sales,
income and gas taxes
in the nation. The
poor look to subsidies
and social services to
get by. Over the last
30 years, California’s
middle classes have
increasingly ﬂed the
state.
“Gone With the
Wind”-like wealth disparity in California is
shocking to the naked
eye. Mostly poor Redwood City looks like
it’s on a different planet
from tony nearby
Atherton or Woodside.
The California elite,
wishing to keep the
natural environment
unchanged, opposes
See CALIFORNIA | 5

THEIR VIEW

Warren didn’t violate Senate rules
By Michael McGough
Contributing columnist

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will
rue the day he moved
to shush Sen. Elizabeth
Warren for trying to read
a 30-year-old letter from
Coretta Scott King critical of Sen. Jeff Sessions,
President Trump’s nominee for attorney general.
In the letter, the wife
of the late Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. had
opposed Sessions’ failed
bid for a federal judgeship. As a U.S. attorney,
King wrote, Sessions
had “used the awesome
powers of his ofﬁce in a
shabby attempt to intimidate and frighten black

voters.”
Within hours of the
Republican majority’s
silencing of Warren for
violating a Senate rule
against impugning the
motives of a fellow senator, Warren supporters
had made a meme of
McConnell’s justiﬁcation
for shutting her up: “She
was warned; she was
given an explanation.
Nevertheless she persisted.”
But put aside the partisan and gender optics
of the gagging of Warren and the fact that the
King letter was later read
without incident by several male senators.
Rule XIX, the rule
designed to keep sena-

“The rule states: ‘No senator in debate
shall, directly or indirectly, by any form of
words impute to another Senator or to other
Senators any conduct or motive unworthy or
unbecoming a senator.’”
tors from attacking one
another, was absurdly
misapplied in this situation.
The rule states: “No
senator in debate shall,
directly or indirectly,
by any form of words
impute to another Senator or to other Senators
any conduct or motive
unworthy or unbecoming
a senator.”
The original intent of
the rule, if you will, was
to preserve comity and
focus the attention sena-

tors on substance rather
than ad hominem arguments. But Warren was
commenting on Sessions
not as a colleague but as
the nominee to a position
in the executive branch;
his character (as perceived by Mrs. King) was
central to her argument.
McConnell should have
let this slide.
Michael McGough is the senior
editorial write for the Los Angeles
Times. Readers may email him at
michael.mcgough@latimes.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Feb.
9, the 40th day of 2017.
There are 325 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On Feb. 9, 1942, the
U.S. Joint Chiefs of
Staff held its ﬁrst formal
meeting to coordinate
military strategy during
World War II. Daylightsaving “War Time” went
into effect in the United
States, with clocks moved
one hour forward. The
SS Normandie, a former
French liner being reﬁtted for the U.S. Navy at a
New York pier, caught ﬁre
(it capsized early the next
morning).
On this date:
In 1773, the ninth
president of the United
States, William Henry
Harrison, was born in
Charles City County, Virginia.
In 1825, the House of
Representatives elected
John Quincy Adams
president after no candidate received a majority
of electoral votes.
In 1861, Jefferson Davis
was elected provisional
president of the Confederate States of America at
a congress held in Montgomery, Alabama.
In 1870, the U.S.
Weather Bureau was
established.
In 1933, the Oxford
Union Society approved,
275-153, a motion “that
this House will in no

circumstances ﬁght for
its King and Country,”
a stand that was widely
denounced. (On this
date in 1983, the Oxford
Union rejected, 416-187,
a motion “that this House
would not ﬁght for Queen
and Country.”)
In 1943, the World War
II battle of Guadalcanal
in the southwest Paciﬁc
ended with an Allied victory over Japanese forces.
In 1950, in a speech in
Wheeling, West Virginia,
Sen. Joseph McCarthy,
R-Wis., charged the State
Department was riddled
with Communists.
In 1964, The Beatles
made their ﬁrst live
American television
appearance on “The Ed
Sullivan Show,” broadcast
from New York by CBS.
In 1971, a magnitude 6.6 earthquake in
California’s San Fernando
Valley claimed 65 lives.
The crew of Apollo 14
returned to Earth after
man’s third landing on the
moon.
In 1984, Soviet leader
Yuri V. Andropov, 69, died
15 months after succeeding Leonid Brezhnev; he
was followed by Konstantin U. Chernenko (chehrNYEN’-koh).
In 1997, Best Products
closed the last of its
stores, a victim of the
diminishing allure of the
catalog showroom concept of retailing.
In 2002, Britain’s Princess Margaret, sister of
Queen Elizabeth II, died

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Modesty is the conscience of the body.”
— Honore de Balzac,
French author and dramatist (1799-1850)

in London at age 71.
Ten years ago: Defense
Secretary Robert Gates
told reporters in Munich,
Germany, that serial
numbers and other markings on bombs provided
“pretty good” evidence
that Iranians were supplying either weapons
or technology to Iraqi
extremists. British actor
Ian Richardson, who
portrayed immoral politician Francis Urquhart in
the satirical TV drama
“House of Cards,” died in
London at age 72.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama freed
10 states from some of
the toughest requirements
of the No Child Left
Behind education law.
The Pentagon formally
opened thousands of jobs
to women in units that
were closer to the front
lines than ever before.
Former skiing champion
Jill Kinmont Boothe, who
became a painter and
a teacher after she was
paralyzed during a race
and was the subject of a
book and two Hollywood
ﬁlms, died in Carson City,
Nevada, at age 75.
One year ago: Republican Donald Trump posted
a decisive victory in the
New Hampshire primary,

while Democrats lined up
behind Bernie Sanders
in their own act of antiestablishment deﬁance.
President Barack Obama
unveiled his eighth and
ﬁnal budget, a $4 trillionplus proposal freighted
with liberal policy initiatives and tax hikes. Two
commuter trains crashed
head-on in a remote area
of southern Germany, killing 12 people and injuring
dozens of others.
Today’s Birthdays: Television journalist Roger
Mudd is 89. Actress Janet
Suzman is 78. Nobel
Prize-winning author J.M.
Coetzee is 77. Actresspolitician Sheila James
Kuehl (kyool) (TV: “The
Many Loves of Dobie
Gillis”) is 76. Singersongwriter Carole King is
75. Actor Joe Pesci is 74.
Singer Barbara Lewis is
74. Author Alice Walker
is 73. Actress Mia Farrow is 72. Former Sen.
Jim Webb, D-Va., is 71.
Singer Joe Ely is 70.
Actress Judith Light is 68.
Rhythm-and-blues musician Dennis “DT” Thomas (Kool &amp; the Gang)
is 66. Actor Charles
Shaughnessy is 62. Actor
Ed Amatrudo (TV: “Nashville”) is 61. Virginia Gov.
Terry McAuliffe is 60.

�y

NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

increase in revenue in the
last quarter of 2016 when
meters were not in use.
Our employees utilize
From page 1
two courthouse parking
Moves by the Meigs
lots, and we encourage
County Commissioner
them to use the former
to provide parking for
Powell’s lot for overﬂow, so
courthouse employees
we certainly do not foresee
alleviated some concerns of our employees using the
bottleneck, and the board
street for parking.
sent an ofﬁcial letter to
The merchants of Pomevillage council supporting
roy share a common vision
removal.
of Pomeroy as a place that
The letter from the
is customer friendly; a
commissioners addressed
shopping, entertainment,
to Council President Don
and dining experience
Anderson stated,
where visitors to the town
“We have been in comcan stay and patronize
munication with several of several businesses on a
the merchants regarding
single visit. We know our
the parking meters in town. local merchants are the
We fully support the idea
backbone of our economic
of removing the parking
development, and if they
meters. Based on input
see this as a necessity for
from our local merchants,
their businesses to thrive in
there was a signiﬁcant
Pomeroy, then we certainly

want to support them.”
An immediate concern
by council was recouping
the $14,000 spent on the
most recent installation of
parking meters in 2016.
Around $7,000 has been
brought in as parking revenue since then, though that
number includes all sources
downtown.
A complete ﬁnancial
picture has been difﬁcult to
determine, as the parking
revenue and costs have not
been uniformly tracked:
meter revenue and ticket
revenue were usually not
kept separate, an unknown
number of meters spent
lengthy periods full but not
emptied (appearing as broken to users), and complete
labor costs for collection
have not been calculated.
Ultimately, the council
set aside any potential

outstanding deﬁcit on the
basis continued success
of downtown businesses
would also generate money
for the village.
Council also determined to explore selling
the meters after they are
removed, further defraying
expenses.
After the merchants stated they had already paid
more labor hours because
of a signiﬁcant increase
in customers, the council
voted unanimously to make
the whole of downtown
Pomeroy free parking.
“We think it is just
wonderful you’ve come to
this decision,” said Clark.
“You’ll never know how
much we appreciate this.”

House

information to allow them
to be successful as they
move into their own home.
Throughout the building
From page 1
process, the homeowner
Lauren Oliver from Habi- has been able to select
tat for Humanity explained the paint colors, ﬂooring,
to those at the hard hat
cabinets, counter tops and
tour some of the steps that other items in the house,
go into the process for the so that when they move in
future homeowner and the the place will feel like it is
involvement of the family
home.
in the building process.
In picking the items and
Homeowners are
being part of the building
required to complete 250
process, the homeowner is
hours of volunteer work,
“bonding with the house”
including time working on said Oliver.
their own home.
“We are not building
Additionally, the homea house for them, we are
owner receives educational building a house with

them,” said Oliver.
“I want to thank each
and every one of you from
the bottom of my heart,”
said Smith to the sponsors.
Smith, who has been in
construction for more than
30 years, including the
last two with Habitat for
Humanity, said that of the
seven builds he has been
part of the current project
in Middleport has been
the “most enjoyable” and
received the best community support.
Mark Porter said that
when he was approached
about the wall build, he
wanted to be the ﬁrst to

do it, hoping that it would
plant a seed which would
grow for future projects.
Porter said that there are
so many in need of assistance and help, and that
this project may get more
started.
“It is a good investment for the community.
You never know who you
are going to reach,” said
Porter.
A dedication for the
house is scheduled for 6
p.m. on Monday, March
13 at the house which is
located at 690 Brownell
Ave., Middleport.

California

dent is not its sickness, nor
are secession and nulliﬁcation its cures.
Instead, California is
becoming a reactionary
two-tier state of masters
and serfs whose culture is
as peculiar and out of step
with the rest of the country as was the antebellum
South’s. No wonder the
state lashes out at the rest
of the nation with threatened updated versions

of the Old Confederacy’s
secession and nulliﬁcation.
But such reactionary
Confederate obstructionism is still quite an irony
given California’s self-righteous liberal preening.

public schools remain
among the nation’s poorest. Private academies are
booming for the offspring
From page 4
of the coastal privileged,
internal improvements
just as they did among
and sues to stop pipelines, the plantation class of the
aqueducts, reservoirs, free- South.
ways and affordable housCalifornia, for all its braging for the coastal poor.
gadocio, cannot not leave
California’s crumbling
the U.S or continue its
roads and bridges somestates’-rights violations of
times resemble those of the federal law. It will eventuold rural South. The state’s ally see that the new presi-

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

30°

25°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

Precipitation

57°/50°
45°/27°
77° in 1937
-5° in 1899

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.18
Month to date/normal
0.20/0.86
Year to date/normal
4.18/3.83

Snowfall

(in inches)

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

3

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.0/2.4
Season to date/normal
4.4/13.9

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: In February, where is the warmest
place in the world?
Fri.
7:26 a.m.
6:00 p.m.
5:55 p.m.
7:03 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

Feb 10 Feb 18 Feb 26

First

Mar 5

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
10:04a
10:56a
11:49a
12:19a
1:10a
2:02a
2:52a

Minor
3:50a
4:43a
5:36a
6:29a
7:22a
8:13a
9:03a

Major
10:32p
11:23p
---12:41p
1:33p
2:24p
3:14p

Minor
4:18p
5:10p
6:02p
6:54p
7:45p
8:36p
9:25p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Feb. 9, 1934, temperatures
dropped to 11 degrees below zero in
Philadelphia and 15 degrees below
zero in New York City. The temperature in Vanderbilt, Mich., dropped to
51 degrees below zero.

SUNDAY

MONDAY

74°
39°

Mostly cloudy and not Cloudy and warmer; a
as cold
p.m. shower

Cloudy and warmer
with showers

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Logan
27/13

Adelphi
27/12
Chillicothe
26/16
Waverly
27/17
Lucasville
30/17
Portsmouth
31/17

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.03
19.62
22.29
12.24
12.65
24.71
21.07
25.82
34.05
12.35
20.20
34.10
19.00

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.98
+2.04
+0.35
-0.62
+0.18
+0.38
+4.22
-0.43
-0.48
-0.39
+1.40
+0.60
+0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Ashland
33/19
Grayson
34/19

46°
28°

Mostly cloudy

Sun followed by
increasing clouds

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
28/15
Belpre
31/16

St. Marys
29/15

Parkersburg
28/15

Coolville
30/14

Wilkesville
29/16
POMEROY
Jackson
33/17
30/15
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
33/16
31/16
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
23/17
GALLIPOLIS
33/17
33/17
33/17

South Shore Greenup
34/18
30/16

37

WEDNESDAY

46°
26°

Partly sunny and
cooler

Murray City
27/12
Athens
29/14

McArthur
27/13

TUESDAY

52°
31°

Elizabeth
31/16

Spencer
33/17

A: Australia.

Today
7:27 a.m.
5:59 p.m.
4:50 p.m.
6:17 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

ground Railroad conductor from Ripley; Milton
Holland, a soldier and
Medal of Honor recipient
From page 1
of the 5th U.S.C.T.; and
throughout World War
other key ﬁgures in AfriII. Pilots were trained at
can American History.
Moton Field, considered
For over 12 years, Gibbs
the Tuskegee Army Air
has presented historical
Field, and educated at
workshops and perforTuskegee University near mances on the United
Tuskegee, Ala. The airmen States Colored Troops
were considered the ﬁrst
and their participation
African American military in the Civil War. Gibbs is
pilots in the United States a graduate of The Ohio
Armed Forces in a time
State University. He is
when much of the military currently employed by
was still segregated and
the Ohio History Connechad to overcome discrimi- tion as the Coordinator of
nation while serving in air Community Engagement.
and on ground.
He is founder and Creative
Gibbs has traveled
Director of Black Historic
throughout the state of
Impressions, an organiOhio as a teaching artist
zation dedicated to the
and living history perform- remembrance, appreciaer. He has portrayed living tion and exhibition of Afrihistory characters such
can American contribuas John Parker, an Under- tions throughout history.

59°
54°

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

SATURDAY

44°
40°
31°

Airmen

Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and
historian at the Hoover Institution,
Stanford University and the author,
most recently, of “The Father of Us All:
War and History, Ancient and Modern”
You can reach him by emailing
author@victorhanson.com.

FRIDAY

Breezy and colder, a ﬂurry this morning.
Increasing clouds tonight. High 33° / Low 17°

out an administrator since
Paul Hellman left in late
spring/early summer 2016.
Price increases in water
From page 1
and sewer service since
responsibilities outlined
that time have provoked
in the Ohio Revised Code, questions from Pomeroy
which include overseeing
residents about the lack of
the “Operator of Record”
a water department head,
for water and sewer sysand whether that lack of
tems. Woodall said an
management ultimately
Operator of Record is “an resulted in unfair burdens
Ohio licensed EPA opera- on Pomeroy residents.
tor responsible for compliThe council has mainance and reporting,” and
tained in several sessions
are typically the same indi- that a number of measures
vidual in smaller villages.
were pending to improve
Woodall will initially
Pomeroy’s water system,
be the full director of the
but “right at the time
Public Works department increases went into effect,
in Pomeroy, though the
we lost our water superincouncil did discuss poten- tendent,” said Councilpertially moving some Public son Ohlinger.
Works responsibilities into
Referring to the many
a separate position.
water related issues
Such a partition would
brought before Council
allow him to “focus on the by residents and media
water plant, on the sewer in recent weeks, Council
plant. Because running
President Don Anderson
the treatment plants is
stated, “Every one of them
demanding. Distribution
are going to get looked
and collection systems
at.”
take a lot time to manage,”
said Woodall.
Michael Hart is a freelance writer for
Pomeroy has been with- The Daily Sentinel.

Michael Hart is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Pomeroy

Buffalo
34/18

Ironton
33/18

Milton
33/18

St. Albans
33/19

Huntington
32/17

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
54/42
80s
70s
Billings
47/38
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
62/53
10s
Denver
0s
70/44
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
76/59
T-storms
Rain
El Paso
Showers
78/49
Snow
Flurries
Chihuahua
81/45
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Clendenin
30/4
Charleston
32/17

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
5/4

Minneapolis
17/15

Toronto
22/14
Detroit
Chicago 24/15
24/17

Kansas City
35/29

Montreal
12/2

New York
31/17

Washington
40/23

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
67/42/s
20/0/c
52/30/pc
37/21/r
35/18/sn
47/38/c
55/40/c
32/11/sn
32/17/sf
53/24/pc
58/43/pc
24/17/s
27/17/pc
24/17/sf
25/15/sn
62/46/pc
70/44/pc
26/22/pc
24/15/sf
79/66/s
71/50/s
24/16/s
35/29/pc
78/60/pc
50/32/s
76/59/pc
33/22/pc
85/65/t
17/15/s
40/25/pc
65/49/pc
31/17/sn
56/41/pc
79/50/pc
33/17/sn
84/59/pc
26/13/sf
21/5/sn
51/24/pc
46/22/r
34/29/s
62/49/pc
62/53/r
54/42/r
40/23/sn

Hi/Lo/W
72/46/pc
8/-7/sf
59/42/pc
35/28/s
36/28/pc
47/24/c
51/28/pc
24/17/s
44/39/c
53/41/pc
63/36/pc
43/37/c
46/42/pc
34/32/sf
38/34/c
75/60/pc
73/43/pc
55/34/pc
33/31/sn
79/69/sh
75/66/sh
43/40/pc
62/48/pc
73/54/c
66/56/pc
64/54/r
51/48/pc
78/65/s
44/33/pc
59/49/pc
71/59/s
29/26/pc
75/53/pc
73/52/s
32/27/pc
85/62/c
32/29/c
20/8/pc
50/39/pc
44/36/pc
62/51/pc
54/36/r
59/46/r
48/38/r
40/34/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
52/30

High
Low

93° in Laredo, TX
-29° in Hallock, MN

Global
High
Low

Houston
71/50
Monterrey
81/57

Miami
85/65

116° in Moomba, Australia
-58° in Ust’-Charky, Russia

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

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Thursday, February 9, 2017 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 9, 2017 s 6

Marauders roll
NelsonvilleYork, 80-53
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio
— The Marauders put
on a clinic in offensive
efﬁciency.
The Meigs boys basketball team made shot over
52 percent from the ﬁeld,
dished out 22 assists and
had just ﬁve turnovers
on Tuesday night in Ben
Wagner Gymnasium, as
the Marauders marched
to an 80-53 victory over
Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division host Nelsonville-York.
The Marauders (11-8,
6-3 TVC Ohio) outscored
the Buckeyes (10-10, 1-9)
by a 13-to-8 clip over the
ﬁrst eight minutes of play.
MHS went on a 23-to-15
second quarter run, and
the Maroon and Gold
took a 36-23 lead into the
break.
Nelsonville-York outscored its guest by a narrow 18-to-17 clip in the
third quarter, cutting the
Meigs lead to 12 points,
at 53-41, headed into the
ﬁnale.
The Marauders ﬁnished
strong, outscoring the
Buckeyes 27-to-12 over
the ﬁnal eight minutes, to
seal the 80-53 win.
See MARAUDERS | 7

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE
Thursday, February 9
Girls Basketball
Southern at South Gallia, 7:30
Portsmouth at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
Alexander at Meigs,
7:30
Vinton County at River
Valley, 7:30
Rose Hill at Hannan,
6:30
Wahama at Waterford,
7:30
Eastern at Trimble,
7:15
Wrestling
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Friday, February 10
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Wahama, 7:30
Covenant Christian at
Hannan, 7:30
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 7:30
Eastern at Waterford,
7:30
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 7:30
Southern at Ironton St.
Joseph, 7:30
Meigs at Wellston, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Covenant Christian at
Hannan, 6 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern’s Nate Durst (center) drives past a SGHS defender, during the Eagles’ two-point win, on Tuesday in Tuppers Plains.

Eagles nip South Gallia, 40-38
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
The Eagles trailed most of the
game, but they held the lead
when it mattered.
The Eastern boys basketball
team led for a total of 12 seconds — including the ﬁnal ﬁve
— on Tuesday night in Meigs
County, as the Eagles claimed
a 40-38 victory over Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
guest South Gallia.
Eastern (7-11, 7-6 TVC
Hocking) initially trailed, but
led 4-3 from the 4:43 mark of
the ﬁrst quarter, until SGHS
(3-16, 2-11) regained the
advantage at 5-4, just seven seconds later. The Rebels ended
the ﬁrst quarter with an 8-to-4

run and took the 13-8 lead into
the second.
EHS tied the game twice in
the second stanza, ﬁrst at 15
and again at 17. The Eagles
were held scoreless for the ﬁnal
4:30 of the ﬁrst half, and South
Gallia took a 22-17 lead into
the locker room.
The Rebels began the second
half with a 7-to-2 run, giving
the guests their largest lead
of the night, at 29-19. Eastern
ended the third quarter with a
7-to-3 run, trimming the SGHS
lead to 32-26 with eight minutes remaining.
The Eagles scored seven of
the ﬁrst eight points in the ﬁnale, tying the game at 33. SGHS
reestablished a two-point lead,
See EAGLES | 7

South Gallia freshman Austin Day drives between a pair of EHS defenders, during
the Eagles’ 40-38 win, on Tuesday in Tuppers Plains.

Vikings hit for 100 on Raiders
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio —
With any mammoth
upset bid far no longer
a threat, and with River
Valley’s Senior Night
since spoiled on the
scoreboard, the only
question remaining
on Tuesday night was
whether the visiting
Paul Boggs/OVP Sports Vikings would hit 100.
The answer was yes
River Valley’s Jacob Dovenbarger (32) battles Vinton County’s
Naylen Yates (44) for a rebound during Tuesday night’s Tri- —and in school recordValley Conference Ohio Division boys basketball game at setting fashion.
River Valley High School.

In establishing a new
Vinton County High
School boys basketball
record for most points
scored in a single game,
the talented and highlytouted Vikings —ranked
sixth in this week’s Associated Press Division II
statewide poll, routed the
Raiders 104-51 in a TriValley Conference Ohio
Division tilt.
That’s correct.
These Vikings are
ofﬁcial school-record
holders, breaking the pre-

vious mark of 103 points
in a game.
Tuesday’s triumph
marked the second time
this season that VCHS
had reached the century
mark — with the other
being a 100-52 win at
Nelsonville-York.
Vinton County reached
the newest plateau by
dominating the ﬁnal
28-and-a-half minutes.
The Vikings never
trailed, and the closest
River Valley got was a 3-2
See VIKINGS | 7

60704168

PLAYER
Meigs:
Jared Kennedy
Senior
Lead the Marauders in
two games with totals of
19 points, 18 rebounds, 3
blocks and 1 Slam Dunk.

OF THE

WEEK

Eastern:
Jett Facemyer
Senior
Lead the Eagles in the
last two games with
totals of 49 points and 7
rebounds.

Southern:
Crenson Rodgers
Senior
Lead his team in the win
against South Gallia with
8 points, 8 rebounds and
3 assists.
60704163

Anderson www.andersonmcdaniel.com Meigs
Memory
McDaniel ������������������

Funeral Homes

949-2300

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Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7440
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�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Eagles
From page 1

but Eastern tied the game
at 35, with 3:25 left.
EHS was held to just one
point over the next 2:25,
however, and the Rebels
held a 38-36 lead, with one
minute to play.
Eastern tied the game
at 38 with 58 seconds left,
and SGHS missed the
front-end of a 1-and-1 on
their ensuing possession.
After an empty trip from
the hosts, South Gallia
was set to inbound the ball
with 13 seconds remaining. The Rebels committed
their ninth turnover of the
quarter on the inbound
pass, giving the Eagles
possession with 11 seconds to play.
Eastern went to its
senior leader, Jett Facemyer, and he came through
with a successful jump
shot from the lane, giving
the the Green, White and
Gold a 40-38 lead with ﬁve
seconds to play. The Rebel
three-pointer at the buzzer
bounced off the left side of
the rim, sealing the twopoint win for EHS.
“Everybody in the gym
knew who was probably
going to get the ball,” Eastern head coach Jeremy Hill
said of the Eagles’ ﬁnal
offensive possession. “That
was our ﬁrst option, but
we had a second option
setup if he didn’t have
something. Fortunately, we
didn’t have to need to, and
Jett made the shot for us.”
Eastern won the
rebounding battle by a
31-to-21 clip, including
11-to-8 on the offensive
end. Both teams ﬁnished
with 19 turnovers, but the
Eagles only gave the ball
away ﬁve times after halftime. The Rebels claimed
advantages in assists
(13-to-11) and steals (14to-11).
“In the ﬁrst half, our
defense created offense,”
SGHS head coach Larry
Howell said.”Defensively,
when you’re getting deﬂections and steals, you play
in a rhythm and you make
shots. I think we forced
them into the shot we
wanted to on the ﬁrst
shot, but we gave them
the offensive rebounds and
second chance opportunities.”
For the game, Eastern shot 18-of-49 (36.7
percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 1-of-7 (14.3 percent) from the three-point
range. Meanwhile, South
Gallia was 15-of-41 (36.6
percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 2-of-13 (15.4
percent) from beyond the
arc. From the free throw

Marauders
From page 6

The Buckeyes won the
rebounding battle by a
27-23 count, but committed
19 turnovers and dished out
14 assists in the setback.
Meigs claimed advantages in steals (13-to-4) and
blocked shots (3-to-1).
The Maroon and Gold
made 30-of-57 (52.6 percent) ﬁeld goal attempts,
including 10-of-30 (33.3
percent) from beyond the
arc. NYHS was 21-of-42
(50 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 5-of-17
(29.4 percent) from deep.
From the line, Meigs was
10-of-15 (66.7 percent) and
Nelsonville-York was 6-of-12
(50 percent).
Meigs had 10 players
mark in the scoring column,
including four reaching
double digits.
MHS junior Christian
Mattox led the victors with
14 points, followed by Luke
Musser and Weston Baer
with 12 each. T.J. Williams
posted 11 points, Dillon
Mahr added nine, while
Jared Kennedy and Zach
Bartrum both scored eight
points. Bailey Caruthers,

line, EHS was 3-of-9 (33.3
percent) and SGHS shot
6-of-12 (50 percent)
“I think they’re zone
bothered us a little bit,”
said Coach Howell. “They
played it from the middle
of the second quarter on.
We settled for a lot of jump
shots instead of attacking
the rim and I think that
was the difference.”
The Rebels have now
lost three straight games.
Eastern is just 2-2 in its
last four games overall, but
the Eagles have won four
consecutive TVC Hocking
games.
“We were very fortunate to get another ‘w’
here tonight, it was hardfought,” Coach Hill said.
“Hat’s off to South Gallia,
they are much improved
from the ﬁrst time we saw
them. We always have a
game with them. We wish
well for Coach Howell, I
know he’s going through
a difﬁcult time right now,
I have a lot of respect for
that man.”
The Eagles also defeated
South Gallia in dramatic
fashion in Mercerville
on December 6, as a pair
of Sharp Facemyer free
throws, after the ﬁnal
buzzer, gave Eastern a
40-39 win.
On Tuesday, the Eagles
were led by Jett Facemyer
with 22 points, followed
by Kaleb Hill with 10. Jeremiah Martindale scored
seven points in the win,
while Garrett Barringer
added one marker.
Kaleb Hill — who led
Eastern’s defense with four
steals and the game’s lone
rejection — pulled in a
game-best nine rebounds,
followed by Barringer and
Jett Facemyer with seven
each. Sharp Facemyer
dished out a team-high
ﬁve assists for the Green,
White and Gold.
Austin Stapleton led the
Rebels with nine points,
followed by Caleb Henry
and Josh Henry with eight
each. Curtis Haner scored
ﬁve points in the setback,
Nick Klaiber chipped in
with four markers, while
Eli Ellis and Joey Woodall
both had two points.
Caleb Henry — who
paced the Rebels with ﬁve
assists — led the guests
on the glass with seven
rebounds, followed by Josh
Henry with six. Haner
and Klaiber both recorded
three steals to lead the
SGHS defense.
Both teams are scheduled to be back in action
on Friday, as South Gallia
visits Wahama and Eastern
travels to Waterford.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Zach Helton and Devon
Hawley rounded out the
Marauder scoring with two
points apiece.
Kennedy led Meigs on
the glass with seven boards,
while Bartrum recorded a
game-best six assists. Baer
and Mattox both came up
with three steals for the
MHS defense, while Kennedy blocked three shots.
Aron Davis led the Buckeyes with 20 points, eight
rebounds and four assists.
Next was Ethan Bohyer
with 14 points and eight
boards, followed by Justin
Perry with 10 points and
four assists.
Levi Wickmann and
Ronnie Wend both scored
four points in the setback,
while Reece Robson had
one point. Wickmann led
the NYHS defense with two
steals and a blocked shot,
while Wend added two
steals.
The Marauders also
defeated Nelsonville-York
on December 20, by a 69-30
count, in Rocksprings.
Both teams are back in
action on Friday, as Meigs
visits Wellston and Nelsonville-York hosts River Valley.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Thursday, February 9, 2017 7

CBA sweeps Defenders
By Paul Boggs

ots came out ﬁring
—making seven threepointers as part of their
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
27-point ﬁrst period.
— The Defenders dug
From there, the
themselves too deep a
Defenders played prethole.
ty much even —even
By falling behind 27-7 tying the second stanza
following the opening
13-13 and winning the
quarter, the Ohio Valthird frame 14-13.
ley Christian School
The Patriots took the
boys basketball team
ﬁnal quarter 17-12 for
suffered a 70-46 loss to the 70-46 ﬁnal.
Calvary Baptist AcadWith the loss, OVCS
emy on Tuesday night. slipped to 13-9 — and
The visiting Patrifell victim to a CBA
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

season sweep.
The Patriots posted
a 60-49 triumph in
the Defenders’ season
opener.
Calvary Baptist
improved to 26-3, as
Justice Hutchison
poured in 23 points to
pace the winners.
Luke Pauley added
18 points and Chase
Taylor tallied 13 for
CBA.
Three Defenders —
Hollis Morrison with

13, Austin Ragan with
12 and Justin Beaver
with 10 — placed in
double ﬁgure scoring.
OVCS returns to
action on Monday
night — when it travels
to Hannan for a 7:30
p.m. tipoff.
The matchup will follow the girls game (at 6
p.m.) between the two
teams.

Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

Lady Defenders avenge Calvary, 46-25
By Bryan Walters

of Katie Bradley trifectas
in the opening quarter
en route to an early 10-2
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
advantage, then Emily
— The Ohio Valley
Childers scored seven
Christian girls basketball points as part of a 13-8
team held visiting Calcharge that resulted in a
vary Baptist Academy to 23-10 lead at the break.
single digits in each of
Rachel Sargent scored
the four quarters of play six points as part of a
Tuesday night en route
10-8 third quarter run
to a 46-25 victory in a
that resulted in a 33-18
non-conference matchup cushion headed into the
in the Old French City.
ﬁnale, then the hosts
The Lady Defenders
netted 7-of-8 free throw
(6-8) led wire-to-wire
attempts as part of a
in picking up their third 13-7 run to close out regconsecutive win as the
ulation for the 21-point
hosts shot 35 percent
triumph.
from the ﬁeld and manWith the win, Ohio
aged double digits in
Valley Christian avenged
each of the four periods a 31-23 setback to the
of action.
Lady Patriots (8-13)
OVCS received a pair back on December 2 in
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Hurricane.
The Lady Defenders
connected on 17-of-49
shot attempts overall,
which included a 4-of-14
effort from behind the
arc for 29 percent. The
hosts were also 8-of-10
at the free throw line for
80 percent.
Sargent and Childers
both paced OVCS with
13 points apiece, followed by Bradley with
10 markers. Kristen
Durst and Cori Hutchison were next with four
points apiece, while Lala
Hurlow completed the
scoring with two markers.
Sargent and Durst
each hauled in six
rebounds apiece, with

Sargent also chipping
in ﬁve blocked shots.
Olivia Neal also dished
out a team-high three
assists.
Jancee Crotts led Calvary Baptist Academy
with 13 points, with
eight of those coming
in the second quarter.
Hannah Bailey was next
with ﬁve markers, while
Madison Smith and
Kaitlyn Richards each
added three points.
Hannah Holstein
concluded the visiting
tally with one point. The
Lady Patriots were 3-of9 at the charity stripe for
33 percent.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Grace Christian edges Hannan
By Paul Boggs

the opening quarter, but
then were outscored
58-39 in the ﬁnal three
frames.
Grace Christian cut
into its deﬁcit by halftime at 33-26, then took
the third period 22-16
— to trail by just one at
49-48.
Grace then doubled
up the Wildcats in the
fourth quarter, 18-9.
With the loss, Hannan
fell to 5-10, while Grace
Christian improved its

record to 8-10.
The Wildcats also fell
victim to the season
sweep, as Grace Christian defeated Hannan in
the opening game of the
year.
Adam Childers poured
in a game-high 35 points
to pace Grace, as Eli Foster ﬁnished with 11.
Corey Hudnall hit for
22 points to lead the
Wildcats, while Dalton
Coleman scored 17 and
Malachi Cade added 11.

Logan Nibert netted
six points and Chandler
Starkey had two to
round out the Mason
countians.
The Wildcats will
return home on Friday
night — when they host
Covenant Christian at
7:30 p.m.
The matchup will follow the girls game (at 6
p.m.) between the two
teams.

5-4 in their last nine
games. But I thought
our guys stayed focused
on this game tonight
From page 6
and answered the bell,”
deﬁcit only two minsaid veteran VCHS
utes and 10 seconds in.
coach Matt Combs. “We
The Vikings held a
got off to a good start
slim 7-5 advantage at
in the ﬁrst quarter, and
the 4:38 mark of the
that gave us what we
opening quarter, then
needed the rest of the
closed the canto with
way. I just thought we
a 16-2 run that jumpplayed better offensively
started a historic eveand defensively too.”
ning.
That the Vikings did
Vinton County led
—amassing
36 total
23-7 following the ﬁrst
ﬁeld
goals
including
a
period, then outscored
dozen
three-pointers
the Raiders 24-13 in
—while also meshing
the second stanza —
staking a commanding 20-of-35 free-throw
attempts.
47-20 halftime bulge.
With the win, Vinton
It only increased from
County
climbed to 17-1
there.
—and
remains
atop the
The Maroon and
TVC-Ohio
at
9-1.
White went off for a
The Vikings are the
31-14 advantage in the
defending division
third frame, followed
champions, and only
by a 26-17 outscoring
need home wins over
of the Raiders in the
Alexander and Wellston
fourth.
in their ﬁnal two league
Then, ﬁnally, with
bouts to lock up anoth2:19 remaining, the
Vikings reached 100 on er crown.
“They (Vikings)
the second of two foul
shots by Kurtis Vickers. are a good basketball
Two more VCHS bas- team. They played well
kets in the ﬁnal minute- tonight. They share
and-a-half made it 104- the ball, play fast, they
make the extra pass,
51 —which was also
the Vikings’ largest lead knock down the open
shot, and Coach (Matt)
of the entire night.
“I was real concerned Combs does a tremencoming into this game. dous job of coaching
It’s a long road trip for those guys to do exactly
us on a Tuesday night, what he tells them to
do,” said River Valley
and this has traditionally been a tough place coach Bryan Drumfor us to play for what- mond. “And that’s what
ever reason. And River we’re trying to do. But
Valley has been playing how many early layups
did we miss? A dozen
well. I think they were

or more? That changed
the tempo of the game.
Take nothing away
from Vinton County
tonight, but we have to
get better and we have
to want to be better.
Then points off turnovers were not in our
favor tonight either, and
that’s why the game got
out of hand.”
The game got away
from the Raiders roughly halfway through the
ﬁrst quarter.
River Valley struggled
with turnovers, missed
shots from short range,
and endured foul trouble with three key players all picking up a pair.
Those would be
seniors Jacob Dovenbarger and Tre Craycraft, and junior Jarret
McCarley.
After Tristan Bartoe’s
old-fashioned threepoint play made it
14-5 with two minutes
remaining, the Raiders
never got within seven
points again.
In fact, in the ﬁnal
4:38 of the ﬁrst, Dovenbarger’s putback at the
55-second mark were
River Valley’s only
points.
Three Vikings — Bartoe (26 points), Naylen Yates (24 points)
and Derick Jones (21
points) —all amounted
at least 21.
Bartoe bucketed
eight total ﬁeld goals
and 9-of-11 free throws,
while Yates racked up
nine total ﬁeld goals —

including ﬁve threes.
Jones ﬁnished with
eight ﬁeld goals —three
of which were trifectas.
Dustin Barber paced
the Raiders with 12
points —on four ﬁeld
goals and 3-of-6 foul
shots.
Dovenbarger bagged
ﬁve baskets and a freebie for 11 points, while
Craycraft —on a triple
and 5-of-8 free throws
—added eight.
McCarley, Layne
Fitch and Ian Polcyn
posted ﬁve points
apiece, followed by two
baskets by Jacob Campbell — and a fourthquarter free throw by
Jordan Burns.
The loss left the Raiders at 7-13 — and 2-8 in
the league.
Drummond also discussed his three Silver
&amp; Black seniors —
Dovenbarger, Craycraft
and Polcyn.
“These three seniors
have grown so much —
basketball aside,” said
Drummond. “Ian and
Tre played very little
last year. And they are
two of our guys that
we’ve used a lot this
year. And Dove (Dovenbarger) has been our
one go-to guy all year.”
The Raiders’ ﬁnal
two regular-season
affairs are on the road
— including on Friday
night at NelsonvilleYork.

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

HUNTINGTON, W.
Va. — Unfortunately for
visiting Hannan, a hot
start on Tuesday night
didn’t equal a strong ﬁnish.
The Wildcats were
outscored 40-25 in the
second half — en route
to a 66-58 loss at Grace
Christian in a boys basketball tilt.
Hannan raced out to
a 19-8 lead following

Vikings

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, February 9, 2017

Automotive

LEGALS

Best Deal New &amp; Used

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF KAYLEY
ANNETTE PIERCE
TO KAYLEY ANNETTE
STEWART

MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

Amy Carter
Product Specialist

APPLICANT HEREBY GIVES
60698907

NOTICE THAT SHE HAS
�������������t��������������
FILED AN APPLICATION FOR
Fax: 740-286-5728
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
REQUESTING THE CHANGE
OF NAME FROM KAYLEY
ANNETTE PIERCE TO
KAYLEY ANNETTE STEWART. A HEARING ON THIS
APPLICATION WILL BE HELD
ON MARCH 7TH, 2017 AT
2:30 P.M. IN THE MEIGS
COUNTY PROBATE COURT,
LOCATED AT 100 EAST
SECOND STREET,
POMEROY, OHIO 45769.
2/9/17

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Recently Renovated Clean
2 Bdr. Conveniently located
Reference and Deposit,
No Pets, No Smoking
304-675-5162
Spacious second/third floor
apt overlooking the Gallipolis
City Park and River. LR, Den,
Lg Kitchen-Dining area . 3 BR
2 baths,washer &amp; dryer.
$800 per month.
Call 740-441-7875
Rentals

Notices
FREE Toy Poodle female
Himalayan cat male
740-446-3059

Miscellaneous

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
The Graham Cemetery of New
Haven, WV will be accepting
bids for grass cutting at the
cemetery for the 2017 mowing season. Send bids to Graham Cemetery, P.O. Box 806,
New Haven, WV 25265

Personals
House For Sale
Great location Centenary
3 bedroom 11/2 bath, large
family room, garage plus
carport 87,500 . Seller pay
closing cost no down payment
if qualify 446-9966
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Help Wanted General

Direct Care Needed in Jackson County
Professionals are needed to provide companionship for
individuals with intellectual/developmental disabilities. Direct
Care Professionals provide the care that is essential to quality
of life, as well as quality of care for disabled individuals.
Part time positions available.
No previous experience required, on the job training is provided.

2 nice 3 BR homes
for rent. Call 740-446-3644
for more info.

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

60583312

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Want To Buy

CASE NO. 20176003

�����.BZIFX�3E�t�+BDLTPO �0)������

BNZDBSUFS!NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN
XXX�NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN

Apartments/Townhouses

Daily Sentinel

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

LEGALS

Letart Township in accordance with ORC 117.38 has completed
the filing of the annual financial REPORT with the Autitor of
State's Office. The REPORT is available for viewing at the
Letart Township building after 3:30 p.m. by appointment
740-247-3373. It is also available at the monthly meeting on
February 20, 2017at 5:00 p.m. at the Letart Township building.

Submit resumes to: Westbrook Health Services
Attn: Human Resources
2121 7th Street
Parkersburg, WV 26101
OR
eoates@westbrookhealth.com
LEGALS

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Approval of Application for Water Pollution Control Loan Fund
Assistance
Middleport
237 Race St, Middleport, OH 45760 Facility Description: CW
Financial Assistance ID #: CS390597-0013 Date of Action:
12/08/2016 This project involves designing the installation of
storm sewer laterals; sanitary sewers, catch basins, sewer manholes, associated concrete, curb, pavement, and sidewalk
replacement; water meter and water main relocation.
Final Issuance of Renewal of NPDES Permit
Rutland Regional SD
320 Davis Dr, Rutland, OH Facility Description: Wastewater-Municipality Receiving Water: Little Leading Creek ID #:
0PA00052*GD Date of Action: 03/01/2017 This final action not
preceded by proposed action and is appealable to ERAC.
2/9/17

Help Wanted General

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District is accepting applications for the next two weeks with intentions of filling one field
maintenance position within the next month. The position is
considered a distribution maintenance position, but because of
the advanced changes in our systems technology, computer
knowledge and or other trades will be given preference in the
applicant selection process. No prior water system knowledge is
required as we will train to levels needed. You may pick up an
application at 39561 Bar 30 Road, which is three miles south of
Tuppers Plains just off State Route 7 or print one off of our
website www.tpcwd.org
LEGALS

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Title IV of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, 30 U.S.C. 1201 et seq., the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources Management,
hereby gives notice of the availability of a CATEGORICAL
EXCLUSION CERTIFICATION for an Abandoned Mined Land
reclamation project in the State of Ohio. The Division of Mineral
Resources Management prepared and the Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, United States Department of the Interior, concurred that the activities being undertaken by the proposed project qualify as a category of actions
which would not have significant effects on the environment,
either individually or cumulatively. The certification was submitted by the Division in application for Title IV financial assistance
in reclaiming and restoring land and water resources adversely
affected by past mining. A copy of the certification is available
from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
Mineral Resources Management, 29371 Wheelabout Road,
McArthur, Ohio 45651.
The project covered by this action is titled “Eisnaugle Mine
Entries” (MG-Sb-94) and is located in Salisbury Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. Three dangerous open mine entries are
located within 300ҋ of multiple inhabited structures and near a
state highway. Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) is discharging from
Entry #2 and pooling in pits before discharging downslope
toward a home. The scope of work will include the closure of the
entries using multiple methods including PUF and bate gate.
AMD will be collected and channeled away from the home. All
disturbed areas will be graded and revegetated. This project is
100% federally funded. If you have any questions or concerns
about the project, please contact Mr. Jim Bishop at the Division's
address listed above or at (614) 265-1094.
2/9/17

LEGALS

LEGALS

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Title IV of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, 30 U.S.C. 1201 et seq., the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources Management,
hereby gives notice of the availability of a CATEGORICAL
EXCLUSION CERTIFICATION for an Abandoned Mined Land
reclamation project in the State of Ohio. The Division of Mineral
Resources Management prepared and the Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, United States Department of the Interior, concurred that the activities being undertaken by the proposed project qualify as a category of actions
which would not have significant effects on the environment,
either individually or cumulatively. The certification was submitted by the Division in application for Title IV financial assistance
in reclaiming and restoring land and water resources adversely
affected by past mining. A copy of the certification is available
from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
Mineral Resources Management, 29371 Wheelabout Road,
McArthur, Ohio 45651.
The project covered by this action is titled “Forest Run Mine
Entries” (MG-St-12) and is located in Section 2, Sutton Township, Meigs County, Ohio. Two dangerous open mine entries are
located in the close proximity to Forest Run Road. The first entry
is located within a few feet of a Forest Run Ready Mix parking
lot and is visible and easily accessible. The second is a vertical
shaft located south of Forest Run Road. The scope of work will
include the closure of the open entry with a bat gate to prevent
human entry and provide bat habitat and the shaft will be filled
with polyurethane foam (PUF). All disturbed areas will be graded
and revegetated. This project is 100% federally funded. If you
have any questions or concerns about the project, please
contact Mr. Jim Bishop at the Division's address listed above or
at (614) 265-1094.
2/9/17

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Title IV of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, 30 U.S.C. 1201 et seq., the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources Management,
hereby gives notice of the availability of a CATEGORICAL
EXCLUSION CERTIFICATION for an Abandoned Mined Land
reclamation project in the State of Ohio. The Division of Mineral
Resources Management prepared and the Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, United States Department of the Interior, concurred that the activities being undertaken by the proposed project qualify as a category of actions
which would not have significant effects on the environment,
either individually or cumulatively. The certification was submitted by the Division in application for Title IV financial assistance
in reclaiming and restoring land and water resources adversely
affected by past mining. A copy of the certification is available
from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
Mineral Resources Management, 29371 Wheelabout Road,
McArthur, Ohio 45651.
The project covered by this action is titled “Union Avenue Mine
Entries” (MG-Sb-93) and is located in the Village of Pomeroy,
Salisbury Township, Meigs County, Ohio. Two open mine
entries are located near inhabited structures and roads in the
Village of Pomeroy. Recently playground equipment was
installed within 100 feet of one of the entries at an apartment
complex. The scope of work will include the closure of the
entries with bat gates to prevent human entry and provide bat
habitat. A proper collection point for AMD will be installed and
tied into the existing culvert at the entry near a mobile home. All
disturbed areas will be graded and revegetated. This project is
100% federally funded. If you have any questions or concerns
about the project, please contact Mr. Jim Bishop at the Division's
address listed above or at (614) 265-1094.
2/9/17

PASS TIME
IN LINE.
READ THE
NEWSPAPER.

In Print. Online. In Touch.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, February 9, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

3 7 9 2 8
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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

1 8

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Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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2/09

2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

�10 Thursday, February 9, 2017

Daily Sentinel

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